Spanish police said Sunday eight people have been arrested who allegedly aided a global ring that stole millions from two banks through fraudulent ATM withdrawals.

Six Romanians and two Moroccans are accused of making 446 withdrawals totaling €285,000 (US$392,000) using cloned payment cards at ATMs in Madrid in February, according to a news release from Spain's Interior Ministry. They're also alleged to have stolen €68,000 in December 2012.

Spain's roundup adds to arrests made by the U.S. and Germany in the scam, which saw the Bank of Muscat, based in Oman, and the National Bank of Ras Al-Khaimah PSC, also known as RAKBANK, in United Arab Emirates, lose $45 million.

The well-planned thefts hit the banks twice, in December 2012 and in February, using a network of people who synchronized withdrawals using stolen payment card numbers at ATMs around the world.

U.S. federal prosecutors in New York indicted eight people last May and arrested six in early November. According to court documents, the withdrawal limits were raised on prepaid MasterCard and Visa payment cards.

The limits were increased as a result of a breach of credit card processors in the U.S. and India, which have not been identified.

Spain said its arrests came after Germany detained a key figure who compromised the credit card processors, disabling security features intended to protect accounts such as geographical restrictions and payment limits.

Those arrested in Spain are accused of receiving the prepaid debit card numbers and encoding the numbers onto dummy cards to make the withdrawals.

Spanish police released a video of a raid in which they seized €25,000, payment card encoding devices, 1,000 new magnetic-stripe cards, Apple and other computer equipment, jewelry, perfume and cologne.

The video showed the magnetic stripe card encoding devices, with the model number "MSR605," which is widely available for under $200 on websites such as Amazon and eBay.

RAKBANK suffered $5 million in losses after 4,500 ATM withdrawals were made in 20 countries on Dec. 22, 2012. A second large attack between Feb. 19 and 20 saw the Bank of Muscat lose $40 million, withdrawn by people in 20 countries in just 10 hours.

The New York group is alleged to have withdrawn $2.8 million of RAKBANK's money in thousands of transactions from 140 ATMs around New York. The bulk of it was sent to the organizers of the attacks, according to U.S. prosecutors.

The Interior Ministry said it worked with a U.S. agency on the latest arrests, but did not identify the organization.

Distributor Directory

Vendor Directory

Featured

Slideshows

Looking back at the top 15 M&A deals in NZ during 2017

In 2017, merger and acquisitions fever reached new heights in New Zealand, with a host of big name deals dominating the headlines. Reseller News recaps the most important transactions of the Kiwi channel during the past 12 months.

Copyright 2018 IDG Communications. ABN 14 001 592 650. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of IDG Communications is prohibited.